dc.description.abstract | The principal hypothesis of the present study is that anticipations of
the future of critically placed social actors determine political behavior
and political system outcomes. In this study, the anticipations of samples
of Turkish and Japanese legislators and university students towards 35 possible
political system futures are examined. Frequency tables, the Spearman
correlation and factor analysis are used to reduce, describe and analyze
the data.
The underlying assumption of this study is that any political system may
be characterized or mapped in terms of alternative "outcomes " or 'futures "
and that the anticipations of critically placed respondent groups towards
such "futures governs their behavior and, in turn, determines political
system outcomes. Therefore, a study of anticipations towards such "futures "
is believed to provide a novel basis for predicting political behavior and
political system “futures”.
In the present study, the author has: (a) developed a set of possible
"futures" for the Turkish political system and for the international system;
(b) analyzed the anticipations of legislators and university students towards
these "futures.": (c) developed a theoretical framework and implemented a
methodology for collecting and analyzing anticipations data and for empirically
determining their relation to actual political system outcomes.
Two types of data are considered necessary for this study: (a) time
series data on individual anticipations of political system "futures';'
(b) time series data on political system outcomes. Through analysis of
these data, the major hypothesis of this dissertation is testable. This
dissertation offers only limited evidence in the empirical substantiation
of this hypothesis.
The operational variables through which anticipations of alternative
system "futu res ' were measured are: (a) the likelihood '(probability) of
each future, which is defined as how likely tile respondent believes particular
futures to be; (b) the des Inability (preference) of each future, which is defined
as how desirable particular futures are to the respondent. The results
of the present study include:
(a) Development of a model through which the relationship of anticipations
to behavior and system futures may be determined;
(b) Development of a methodology with which the anticipations of any'
types of respondents towards any kind of possible system futures
may be examined;
(c) Analysis of appropriate data and demonstration of an empirical
test of the hypothesis that anticipations determine (and predict)
political system futures;
(d) Predictions of the probability of various futures for the Turkish
political system and
(e) Predictions of the likely impact of various anticipation patterns on
these futures.
The results of the present study indicate that further research into
political systems and behavior using the anticipations approach will
(a) produce valuable political data; (b) develop a "futures forecasting"
capability in political science; (c) provide empirical evidence on the
predictive power and empirical relationship of anticipations to political
system outcomes. | |